Politics & Government

More Plastics Designated As Recyclable By County, Plastic Bags Excluded

Effective June 1, 2011 plastics numbered 1-7 must be recycled, according to the county.

Beginning June 1, all Westchester County residents, businesses, and schools will be required to recycle not only 1 and 2 numbered plastics, but plastics 3 through 7 as well. 

According to the Westchester County Source Separation Law, items acceptable for recycling include food, beverage, detergent, and shampoo containers and caps, all of which should be rinsed clean before being put out for recycling. For further information on curbside recycling, please check out the county's guide here. 

Equally important to keep in mind are the items deemed not suitable for recycling. They include the following:

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  • Any plastic bags including dry cleaning and grocery store bags.
  • Packaging materials and vinyl.
  • Unmarked plastics such as toys or clothing hangers.
  • Plastic foam.
  • Containers holding hazardous materials.
  • Building materials like kitchen fixtures and PVC piping.

So, what are you supposed to do with those flimsy plastic grocery bags and yards of dry cleaning plastic?  Whatever you do, don’t use the bags to toss out your other recyclables without dumping them out first.

As Sarah Garvan, staff assistant in Solid Waste at the Westchester Department of Environmental Facilities (DEF) explained, “There is no mechanism to get recyclables out of bags. Unfortunately, these recyclables become unusable.”

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The facility receives many items in plastic bags, particularly from multi-residences in urban areas, which are used to protect items that previously held food from the ravages of pests, said Garvan.  Although, sometimes sorters are able to cut open plastic bags and salvage recyclables, other times the items are rejected and treated as garbage.

Those items designated as garbage when they arrive at the recycling facility—nonrecyclables and oversized items—are then sent to a waste-to-energy facility in Peekskill where they are incinerated to make clean renewable energy, Garvan said. This garbage helps to power a total of 88,000 houses in Westchester. 

Americans use approximately one billion plastic bags per year, which accounted for 300,000 tons of landfill waste, according to a Clean Air Council report from 2009 entitled “Why Plastic Bag Fees Work.”

To prevent this from happening, you can take your bags to larger grocery and retail stores—typically those over 10,000 square feet—where bins are set up near the front entrance for plastic bag return, according to the Westchester Department of Environmental Facilities (DEF) website.  Keep in mind you can also recycle the bags that held your bread, cereal, frozen food, and produce in those same bins. However, remember to remove food residue before dropping them in bins. A list of some participating retailers can be viewed on the right hand side of this article, as a PDF file, or you can call your local store to see if they provide recycling bins. 

Recycling efforts appear to be paying off.  Recent statistics from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) website indicate that over a 29-year span from 1980 to 2009, 67 additional tons of garbage (from 15-82 million) bypassed the landfill and, instead, were recycled or composted. 

Although the previous statistic is encouraging, the EPA also reports that the U.S. is only recycling or composting 34 percent of waste, with 12 percent being burned at combustion facilities, and the remaining 54 percent disposed of in landfills.  As of 2006, only 1,754 Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) landfills remained, down from 8,000 in 1988.

Local municipalities are stepping up efforts to keep the public informed of the changes to recycling laws. Municipalities can be cited and fined for violation of recycling policies, with fines varying depending on the number of violations.

If residents do not separate their waste properly, the Department of Public Works (DPW) can refuse to pick up their recycling, instead, slapping an “oops!” sticker on bins informing residents of what they did wrong and how to correct it, according to the Westchester DEF website.


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